The wife of concert promoter Joseph Meli, who has been sentenced to prison for his part in a $104 million pyramid ticket scheme, has been ordered to surrender more than $4 million in investor funds, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced Friday.

Jessica Ingber Meli, Joseph Meli’s wife, was named as a relief defendant in the case by the court, meaning the court can get some of investors’ money back from her.

Joseph Meli has been sentenced to 78 months in jail and ordered to forfeit $104 million, including a house in East Hampton, N.Y., and ordered to pay more than $56 million in restitution. He pled guilty in January 2017 in federal court in Manhattan to securities fraud for enticing investors to put money into a ticket-reselling business that dealt in hard-to-get tickets, including Adele concerts and the Broadway musical "Hamilton."

Joseph Meli was charged both criminally by the U.S. Attorney’s Office and civilly by the SEC.

The house the Melis were ordered to forfeit was bought in Jessica Meli’s name. She agreed to settle with the SEC, consenting to disgorgement and prejudgment interest of approximately $4 million. Because the house in East Hampton is subject to the forfeiture order entered against Joseph Meli in the criminal case, about $3.2 million of the judgment will be deemed satisfied and Jessica Meli will be obligated to pay about $840,000, the SEC said.

The SEC said the majority of the money raised by Joseph Meli was used to make Ponzi payments to prior investors and to enrich Meli, his wife, his mother and others.